Mesoscale and submesoscale effects on mixed layer depth in the Southern Ocean

S. D. Bachman, J. R. Taylor, K. A. Adams, P. J. Hosegood

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

54 Scopus citations

Abstract

Submesoscale dynamics play a key role in setting the stratification of the ocean surface mixed layer and mediating air-sea exchange, making them especially relevant to anthropogenic carbon uptake and primary productivity in the Southern Ocean. In this paper, a series of offline-nested numerical simulations is used to study submesoscale flow in theDrake Passage and Scotia Sea regions of the Southern Ocean. These simulations are initialized from an ocean state estimate for late April 2015, with the intent to simulate features observed during the Surface Mixed Layer at Submesoscales (SMILES) research cruise, which occurred at that time and location. The nested models are downscaled from the original state estimate resolution of 1/12° and grid spacing of about 8 km, culminating in a submesoscale-resolving model with a resolution of 1/192° and grid spacing of about 500m. The submesoscale eddy field is found to be highly spatially variable,with pronounced hot spots of submesoscale activity. These areas of high submesoscale activity correspond to a significant difference in the 30-day average mixed layer depth ΔHML between the 1/12° and 1/192° simulations. Regions of large vertical velocities in the mixed layer correspond with high mesoscale strain rather than large ΔHML. It is found that ΔHML is well correlated with the mesoscale density gradient but weakly correlated with both the mesoscale kinetic energy and strain. This has implications for the development of submesoscale eddy parameterizations that are sensitive to the character of the large-scale flow.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2173-2188
Number of pages16
JournalJournal of Physical Oceanography
Volume47
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2017
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Mesoscale processes
  • Mixed layer
  • Ocean models
  • Southern Ocean
  • Subgrid-scale processes

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